{"title":"Ultrasound as an Adjunct to Mammography for Breast Cancer Screening: A Health Technology Assessment.","authors":"","doi":"","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><strong>Background: </strong>Screening with mammography can detect breast cancer early, before clinical symptoms appear. Some cancers, however, are not captured with mammography screening alone. Ultrasound has been suggested as a safe adjunct screening tool that can detect breast cancers missed on mammography. We investigated the benefits, harms, cost-effectiveness, and cost burden of ultrasound as an adjunct to mammography compared with mammography alone for screening women at average risk and at high risk for breast cancer.</p><p><strong>Methods: </strong>We searched Ovid MEDLINE, Ovid Embase, EBM Reviews, and the NHS Economic Evaluation Database, from January 1998 to June 2015, for evidence of effectiveness, harms, diagnostic accuracy, and cost-effectiveness. Only studies evaluating the use of ultrasound as an adjunct to mammography in the specified populations were included. We also conducted a cost analysis to estimate the costs in Ontario over the next 5 years to fund ultrasound as an adjunct to mammography in breast cancer screening for high-risk women who are contraindicated for MRI, the current standard of care to supplement mammography.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>No studies in average-risk women met the inclusion criteria of the clinical review. We included 5 prospective, paired cohort studies in high-risk women, 4 of which were relevant to the Ontario context. Adjunct ultrasound identified between 2.3 and 5.9 additional breast cancers per 1,000 screens. The average pooled sensitivity of mammography and ultrasound was 53%, a statistically significant increase relative to mammography alone (absolute increase 13%; P < .05). The average pooled specificity of the combined test was 96%, an absolute increase in the false-positive rate of 2% relative to mammography screening alone. The GRADE for this body of evidence was low. Additional annual costs of using breast ultrasound as an adjunct to mammography for high-risk women in Ontario contraindicated for MRI would range from $15,500 to $30,250 in the next 5 years.</p><p><strong>Conclusions: </strong>We found no evidence that evaluated the comparative effectiveness or diagnostic accuracy of screening breast ultrasound as an adjunct to mammography among average-risk women aged 50 years and over. In women at high risk of developing breast cancer, there is low-quality evidence that screening with mammography and adjunct ultrasound detects additional cases of disease, with improved sensitivity compared to mammography alone. Screening with adjunct ultrasound also increases the number of false-positive findings and subsequent biopsy recommendations. It is unclear if the use of screening breast ultrasound as an adjunct to mammography will reduce breast cancer-related mortality among high-risk women. The annual cost burden of using adjunct ultrasound to screen high-risk women who cannot receive MRI in Ontario would be small.</p>","PeriodicalId":39160,"journal":{"name":"Ontario Health Technology Assessment Series","volume":"16 15","pages":"1-71"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2016-07-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4947971/pdf/ohtas-16-1.pdf","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Ontario Health Technology Assessment Series","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"2016/1/1 0:00:00","PubModel":"eCollection","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"Medicine","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Screening with mammography can detect breast cancer early, before clinical symptoms appear. Some cancers, however, are not captured with mammography screening alone. Ultrasound has been suggested as a safe adjunct screening tool that can detect breast cancers missed on mammography. We investigated the benefits, harms, cost-effectiveness, and cost burden of ultrasound as an adjunct to mammography compared with mammography alone for screening women at average risk and at high risk for breast cancer.
Methods: We searched Ovid MEDLINE, Ovid Embase, EBM Reviews, and the NHS Economic Evaluation Database, from January 1998 to June 2015, for evidence of effectiveness, harms, diagnostic accuracy, and cost-effectiveness. Only studies evaluating the use of ultrasound as an adjunct to mammography in the specified populations were included. We also conducted a cost analysis to estimate the costs in Ontario over the next 5 years to fund ultrasound as an adjunct to mammography in breast cancer screening for high-risk women who are contraindicated for MRI, the current standard of care to supplement mammography.
Results: No studies in average-risk women met the inclusion criteria of the clinical review. We included 5 prospective, paired cohort studies in high-risk women, 4 of which were relevant to the Ontario context. Adjunct ultrasound identified between 2.3 and 5.9 additional breast cancers per 1,000 screens. The average pooled sensitivity of mammography and ultrasound was 53%, a statistically significant increase relative to mammography alone (absolute increase 13%; P < .05). The average pooled specificity of the combined test was 96%, an absolute increase in the false-positive rate of 2% relative to mammography screening alone. The GRADE for this body of evidence was low. Additional annual costs of using breast ultrasound as an adjunct to mammography for high-risk women in Ontario contraindicated for MRI would range from $15,500 to $30,250 in the next 5 years.
Conclusions: We found no evidence that evaluated the comparative effectiveness or diagnostic accuracy of screening breast ultrasound as an adjunct to mammography among average-risk women aged 50 years and over. In women at high risk of developing breast cancer, there is low-quality evidence that screening with mammography and adjunct ultrasound detects additional cases of disease, with improved sensitivity compared to mammography alone. Screening with adjunct ultrasound also increases the number of false-positive findings and subsequent biopsy recommendations. It is unclear if the use of screening breast ultrasound as an adjunct to mammography will reduce breast cancer-related mortality among high-risk women. The annual cost burden of using adjunct ultrasound to screen high-risk women who cannot receive MRI in Ontario would be small.
背景:乳房 X 射线照相筛查可以在临床症状出现之前及早发现乳腺癌。然而,仅靠乳房 X 线照相术筛查并不能发现某些癌症。有人认为超声波是一种安全的辅助筛查工具,可以检测出乳房 X 线照相术漏检的乳腺癌。我们研究了超声波作为乳腺 X 线照相术的辅助手段,与单独使用乳腺 X 线照相术筛查乳腺癌中危和高危妇女相比的益处、危害、成本效益和成本负担:我们检索了1998年1月至2015年6月期间的Ovid MEDLINE、Ovid Embase、EBM Reviews和NHS经济评估数据库,以寻找有效性、危害性、诊断准确性和成本效益方面的证据。仅纳入了评估在特定人群中使用超声作为乳腺 X 线照相术辅助手段的研究。我们还进行了成本分析,以估算安大略省在未来 5 年内资助超声波作为乳腺 X 线照相术的辅助手段,为不适合进行核磁共振成像的高风险女性进行乳腺癌筛查所需的成本,核磁共振成像是目前辅助乳腺 X 线照相术的标准治疗方法:没有针对普通风险女性的研究符合临床审查的纳入标准。我们纳入了 5 项针对高危妇女的前瞻性配对队列研究,其中 4 项与安大略省的情况相关。每 1,000 次筛查中,辅助超声检查可发现 2.3 至 5.9 例额外的乳腺癌。乳腺X光检查和超声波检查的综合平均灵敏度为53%,与单独使用乳腺X光检查相比有显著的统计学提高(绝对提高13%;P < .05)。综合检测的平均特异性为 96%,与单独进行乳腺 X 线照相筛查相比,假阳性率绝对增加了 2%。该组证据的 GRADE 值较低。在未来5年内,安大略省有磁共振成像禁忌症的高危妇女使用乳腺超声作为乳腺X线照相术的辅助检查每年将增加15,500至30,250美元的费用:我们没有发现任何证据可以评估乳腺超声波筛查作为乳房 X 线照相术辅助手段对 50 岁及以上普通风险妇女的比较效果或诊断准确性。对于罹患乳腺癌的高风险女性,有低质量的证据表明,乳腺X线照相术和辅助超声波筛查能发现更多的病例,与单纯的乳腺X线照相术相比,灵敏度更高。辅助超声筛查也会增加假阳性结果和后续活检建议的数量。目前还不清楚乳腺超声筛查作为乳腺 X 线照相术的辅助手段是否能降低高危妇女与乳腺癌相关的死亡率。在安大略省,使用辅助超声波筛查无法接受磁共振成像检查的高危妇女,每年的成本负担很小。